The Rural Outback and Remote Paramedic Conference is designed specifically for paramedics and allied health professionals working in rural, outback and remote locations.
Click Here to view the Conference Program
The conference will take place over two days, Thursday 27th and Friday 28th May 2021, 09:30 to 18:00 AEST (Australian Eastern Standard Time)
#ROAR2021 SOCIAL WALL
View full ROAR2021 social wall
The College management team and ROAR conference committee has made the decision to move the conference wholly online, rather than hold the face-to-face events.
We have held off making this decision in the hope that registration numbers across all locations would increase, however they have not. While this is a disappointing decision to have to make, it has been made with the best interest of our attendees, sponsors and speakers in mind.
We are confident the transition to online will be smooth and the conference will still be of a very high calibre, and hopefully in 2022, we can confidently move back to a face-to-face format.
Live Stream: If you wish to attend the live stream of ROAR21 please register via the "Tickets" tab.
Recordings: A link to the conference recordings will be sent to all attendees a few days after the conference. The conference recordings will then be available on the College website early July.
The Rural Outback and Remote Paramedic Conference is designed specifically for paramedics and allied health professionals working in rural, outback and remote locations.
Click Here to view the Conference Program
The conference will take place over two days, Thursday 27th and Friday 28th May 2021, 09:30 to 18:00 AEST (Australian Eastern Standard Time)
The College management team and ROAR conference committee has made the decision to move the conference wholly online, rather than hold the face-to-face events.
We have held off making this decision in the hope that registration numbers across all locations would increase, however they have not. While this is a disappointing decision to have to make, it has been made with the best interest of our attendees, sponsors and speakers in mind.
We are confident the transition to online will be smooth and the conference will still be of a very high calibre, and hopefully in 2022, we can confidently move back to a face-to-face format.
Live Stream: If you wish to attend the live stream of ROAR21 please register via the "Tickets" tab.
David is currently the Executive Manager of Primary Health & Community with Coast and Country Primary Care and brings over 19 years of experience in emergency and community services, within both the paid and the voluntary sectors. David is a results-oriented, patient focused and accomplished Clinician and Health Leader, with extensive experience developing, implementing, maintaining, and continuously improving business management and recovery strategies, plans and procedures, across the public sector, notably NSW Ambulance. Employing a strategic mindset, David has a proven track record of investigating, developing and implementing best practice service delivery policies and guidelines to improve patient outcomes. This includes the implantation of community paramedics within the primary health and community settings to elevate pressure on other healthcare practitioners while improving patients healthcare experience.
Uncle Ken Jones is a proud Boandik Elder from South Australia. Ken has always had a keen interest in the importance of sustainability and the environment and his current work as an educator reinforces and extends this passion. His knowledge of Australian flora and fauna is extensive and his achievements are many and varied, including his award for 2019 NAIDOC Male Elder of the Year, Boandik Community.
Alecka Miles is the Course Coordinator of the Master of Paramedic Practitioner course at Edith Cowan University and works as a Paramedic at a GP clinic in Perth, Western Australia. She is a long-suffering Melbourne Demons fan and proud ‘Mumma’ to Poppy (5 years) and Hamish (3 years), a career highlight and her greatest achievement so far. Despite expressing her concerns about research being a ‘waste of time’ as a M.A.S. graduate paramedic, she has since changed her tune and developed research interests in paramedic education and the roles for paramedics in primary health care in Australia/New Zealand. She has a Masters degree in Emergency Health and is currently undertaking her PhD and looks forward to dressing like a professor from Harry Potter when she graduates.
Emily M. Nichols, MD is the Director and Medical Director for New Orleans EMS. She has been an adult emergency medicine physician since 2006. Dr. Nichols is board certified in both adult and pediatric emergency medicine and cares for persons of all ages during their sickest moments. Her career interests include public health, disaster response, and provider wellness. Dr. Nichols has worked in community clinics in urban and rural settings in the US, Costa Rica, Belize, Haiti, Brazil, and South Africa. Dr. Nichols lectures nationally and internationally on the topics of provider wellness, secondary traumatization, the development of 911 systems and building diverse EMS agencies.
Originally from Naarm/Melbourne, Kait is a registered paramedic based in Mparntwe/Alice Springs. Kait has been fortunate to work across a diverse range of beautiful places across their career including on Larrakia land, Jawoyn land in Nhulunbuy. Kait is a content creator for Outback Responders and honours student with a strong interest in cultural safety.
Sunny is an Australian based academic, paramedic, expedition leader, geographer, and writer with experience in prehospital health care, humanitarian operations, expedition medicine, flight medicine, and emergency service development. He has worked in the Himalayas, Pacific Islands, Central Asia, the Middle East, and the Arctic and founded Medics Beyond Borders to provide creative solutions to impact gaps in prehospital and primary health care services in low GDP countries. Sunny is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, a Fellow of the Academy of Wilderness Medicine, a member of The Association of Professionals in Humanitarian Assistance and Protection, and a member of the Australasian Medical Writers Association.
Paramedic Specialist Intensive and Extended Care. Matt has 21 years of experience in delivering care to regional, rural and remote communities. In being passionate about the capabilities of contemporary paramedicine, Matt promotes integrated models of care and equity in care for rural and remote communities. Supported by bachelor’s degrees in emergency management, clinical practice (Paramedic) and masters in community paramedicine, Matt is now exploring the lived experience of paramedics delivering mental health care as a PhD Candidate at Western Sydney University. Matthew is the Paramedic Lead for St John Ambulance NSW and senior literature reviewer for the Canadian Prehospital Evidenced Based Project. In his downtime, Matt likes to catch up with friends, cook and tend to his veggie patch.
Nicole is an Australian paramedic with a Master’s in Public Health and Tropical Medicine and is a Fellow of the Academy of Wilderness Medicine. Her career began in the Northern Territory of Australia and continued internationally with NGOs and NFPs in Nepal, Tanzania and Europe. Nicole is a core faculty member with the College of Remote and Offshore Medicine in Europe and returned home to Australia last year to work as an exploration paramedic. She is currently working to create an international standard for Remote Area Paramedics with Citadel Medical in Perth.
Krista Reed is a paramedic and sessional academic at Western Sydney University teaching in both postgraduate and undergraduate levels in health science, paramedicine and public health. Krista is also a research officer for the WSU School of Medicine. Krista obtained a Masters of Health Science in 2017 with a dissertation exploring the use of saultogenic approaches in paramedicine and continues this research as her PhD topic at Monash University. Krista has practiced in both rural and metropolitan settings in the US and Australia. Krista researches in the areas of salutogenesis, community paramedicine, social determinants of health and rural and remote health more broadly.
Maxi is 38 years old, originally from Kilkenny, Ireland and has been living in Western Australia for just over 15 years now. Maxi’s journey with St. John started almost 10 years ago and since qualifying he has spent the majority of his Paramedic career in rural Western Australia with secondments in Volunteer Education and as a Community Paramedic. Maxi thoroughly enjoys the Community Paramedic role and the challenges that come with it, which can be quite diverse depending on the location. Outside of work, Maxi likes to switch off down at the coast, catch up with friends and get away camping.
Heulwen is a recent graduate of the Bachelor of Paramedicine (Honours) from Charles Sturt University, Bathurst. She is a novice researcher with a keen interest in trauma and rural paramedicine, having recently completed her Honours thesis on the role of paramedics in regional and rural communities of Australia. She is currently working on publishing the findings of this study, while also beginning a Bachelor of Emergency Management. In her free time, Heulwen volunteers at the local SES unit as a Deputy Rescue Officer and Deputy Team Leader.
Amy moved to the NT in 2017 and continues to work as a paramedic in Alice Springs. Amy started the online platform Outback Responders with a colleague and continues with her team to collate and disseminate professional development content that goes further than just the clinical. Amy is still very early into her career and enjoys learning from the fantastic team around her in the Red centre.
PhD candidate, University of Sydney School of Medicine Northern Clinical School and Research Assistant, HammondCare Centre for Learning & Research in Palliative Care ~ Madeleine is a PhD candidate at the University of Sydney, investigating the role of paramedics delivering palliative and end-of-life care in community-based settings. She has a background in paramedicine, public health, health policy and palliative care. Madeleine’s key interests lie in public health approaches to palliative care and reducing avoidable hospital admissions, and she is particularly passionate about improving systems of care in rural settings.
Tēnā Koutou,He uri ahau ō Te Whakatōhea, No Ōpōtiki ahau. E noho ana au ki Ōtepoti inaianei, he manapou me he tauira takuta taku mahi. (Greetings, I am a descendant of Te Whakatōhea, I am from Ōpōtiki. I live in Dunedin now, I work as a manapou and as a medical student.) Carlton hails from the east coast of the North Island and is of Māori ancestry. For most of the last two decades Carlton has worked in ambulance, the last decade as an ICP mostly in the aeromedical/rescue environment operationally. Outside of operations Carlton helped to set up the Māori advisory group for ambulance in NZ. Developed out of hospital referral pathways and systems for high need low acuity patients and set up a charity to improve access to education and healthcare for remote and rural communities.
A descendant of the Meriam people from the Torres Strait, Kerry’s work has brought her to the forefront of Indigenous affairs in Australia. A former social worker with a Doctorate in Environmental Science, Kerry has held senior positions including Chair of Indigenous Health at the University of Melbourne, Executive Director of First 1000 Days Australia, President of EcoHealth International, CEO of the Lowitja Institute, and Director of Indigenous Health Research at Monash University. With an extensive background in public health, administration, community development and research, Kerry has led a wide range of organisations and committees including the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Equality Council and the National Congress of Australia’s First People. Currently a Director of Kinaway Chamber of Commerce and Managing Director of First 1000 Days Australia (F1000DA) and Karabena Consulting. Kerry holds an honorary professorial position with the University of Melbourne and has a number of entrepreneurial programs in development.
Whilst completing his Nursing education in the early 1990s Dave became a volunteer ambulance officer and has worked in a mixture of environments in both roles. Dave completed a master's in nursing from Melbourne University with a thesis on pain scores and there meaning to patients. Dave currently works as a Paramedic in Cromwell, Central Otago in the South Island of New Zealand and teaches on the post graduate diploma pathway for extend care paramedicine.
Nicole is an Aboriginal woman with a Bachelor of Psychological Sciences (Hons) and a Master’s degree in Public Health. Nicole has spent the last 3 years yarning with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and organisations and working with non-Indigenous stakeholders in order to collaboratively break down the systemic barriers to accessing palliative care experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Nicole is passionate about ensuring that communities receive equitable access to knowledge, resources and care that are of genuine benefit and delivered in a way that empowers, dignifies and respects our rich and diverse Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
Kirsty joined the ambulance sector in 2006 and since then has held operational, clinical and governance roles in various locations across Te Waipounamu, Aotearoa. She now works as a crewman and intensive care flight paramedic with GCH Aviation based in Greymouth. She is passionate about pursuing equity in pre-hospital care for rural and remote communities and optimising patient outcomes through the use of pathways.
Prof Nosaka worked in Japan before relocating to ECU in April 2004. Over the past 16 years, his main responsibilities were to coordinate Postgraduate and Honours research programs (2007-2014), direct the Centre for Exercise and Sports Science Research (2007-2012), and lead the Exercise and Sports Science discipline (2015-present). He has published more than 280 peer-reviewed articles, and approximately 70% of his publications are related to “eccentric exercise.”
Meg Marino, MD, FAAP, is the Deputy Medical Director for New Orleans EMS, Medical Director of Pediatric Prehospital Education for Ochsner Health, and a pediatric emergency medicine physician. She serves as the Chair-Elect for the American Academy of Pediatrics EMS subcommittee. She lectures internationally with the aim of improving the emergency care that pediatric patients receive. Dr. Marino has a strong interest in provider wellness. She is leading the Diversity and Equity Council at New Orleans EMS to help acknowledge biases in healthcare, working to improve access to care to marginalized communities and promoting diversity in EMS
Flight Nurse ~ Breeanna Spring Walsh – AKA Bree grew up in Jurien Bay, WA, relying heavily on the RFDS and silver chain nurse for medical support. Bree is now based in far north Queensland, Townsville. She is a passionate RN since 2004 and RM 2012. BNurs, GCertNurs(IntCare), GCertAeromedRetrieval, GDipMidwifery, GDipAeromedRetrieval. With a critical care background – ICU, CCU, HDU, NCCU
Flight Nurse since 2009, worked across northern Australia and internationally. Bree is currently on maternity leave from RFDS, upskilling between cardiothoracic ICU and maternity unit. Finishing the Master of Medical and Health Science by Research, which has led to this research project.
Passionate about remote health care, especially obstetric and premature neonate care.
Course Coordinator Post Graduate Critical Care Paramedicine, Edith Cowan University ~ David is a Critical Care Paramedic (CCP) with over 20 years’ experience in Paramedicine including nine years as a CCP on the Western Australian Emergency Rescue Helicopter Service (ERHS). He is the Course Coordinator of the Post Graduate Critical Care Paramedicine program at Edith Cowan University. David has conducted a clinical trial of intranasal fentanyl and is currently researching helicopter retrieval of severely injured trauma patients.
Lecturer, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Paramedicine USC ~ Dr Belinda Flanagan has been involved in various areas of health since 1990 and over this period has gained extensive experience in healthcare, emergency medical services and education sectors. Prior to her appointment with USC, Belinda was an Advanced Care Paramedic with both the NSW and Qld Ambulance Service and a Registered Nurse/Midwife with NSW and Qld Health. Belinda frequently collaborates with the Queensland Ambulance Service in guideline development and education in the area of obstetrics and neonatal resuscitation. Belinda has completed a PhD exploring the paramedic response to obstetric emergencies, this will provide recommendations for the management of emergency obstetric cases. ~ Connect with Dr Flanagan on Twitter: @3PEL
Thanks to all our sponsors for this event
St John WA provides emergency ambulance and transport services in metropolitan Perth and fifteen regional centres. Volunteer teams provide these services in other regional areas allowing St John WA to meet the diverse needs of the communities we serve, spread over 2.5 million square kilometres. This is the largest geographical area serviced by a single ambulance operator in the world. Our network of volunteers also provides first aid training, community transport, medical aid and community education at shopping centres, events, schools, and day care centres.
Our paid workforce includes doctors, nurses, dentists, paramedics, patient transport officers, first aid trainers, communication officers and administration staff, who all play a vital role supporting our organisation in the coordination of a sophisticated, centralised supply chain, and providing opportunities for training and development. We also run the State Operations Centre, which fields Triple Zero calls. Why it matters On a day-to-day basis our staff and volunteers make a difference to the lives of countless people. We pride ourselves on our relationship with the community and understand how important it is to feel we each have the care and support of our neighbours in times of need. It’s a unique insight that comes from our foundation as an organisation of volunteers who came together 130 years ago to do just that. We continue to share this affinity with the community we serve, knowing accidents, injuries and emergencies can happen at any time. A community that is capable, competent and equipped to provide vital first aid and support in an emergency is critical.
We are a new world university.
Like our namesake Charles Darwin, we think differently. We innovate, embrace change, and challenge conventions and look for better ways.
We’re not about tradition or legacy, privilege or exclusivity. We care about people as individuals, as well as wider society.
We’re about what you can give to the world, rather than what you take.
We cannot build a new world without diversity of thought; therefore, we bring those with unique perspectives together in an inclusive and supportive learning environment to connect, discover and grow.
This is the CDU difference.
www.cdu.edu.au/
Established in 1991, Edith Cowan University (ECU) has rapidly developed into a modern university that focuses on both research excellence and quality teaching. ECU has taken the opportunity to reshape the way higher education is delivered in our inspiring campus environment and through engaged online delivery modes. It’s an approach that has been rewarded with a five-star rating for teaching quality over the past fourteen years in the Good Universities Guide 2021.
To find out more contact ECU on 134 328 or visit www.ecu.edu.au
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